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| Fixing State Budgets Will Be Painful | | Print | |
| Written by Bob Adelmann | ||||||
| Monday, 12 July 2010 21:00 | ||||||
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Other options offered by Pew included cutting transportation funding, raising taxes, cutting health services, reducing spending for police and fire departments, and slashing the public school budget. Each of those options was also strongly opposed, often by majorities approaching 70 percent. With chances of a double-dip recession increasing (explained here), and with economic recovery stalled, states will be increasingly hard-pressed to present popular solutions for getting their budgets under control. Former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan offered little encouragement when he criticized the financial reform bill, saying that if it's passed in its present form it “will … eliminate lending” and further impede any kind of recovery from which the states might benefit. Economist Nouriel Roubini wrote that even if there is no double-dip recession, “growth [will be] so anemic that [it] will feel like a recession even if it’s not formally one.” The National Bureau of Economic Research hasn’t yet declared an end to the recession, which started officially in December of 2007. Such a double-dip wouldn’t be unique in history, either, according to Professor Sung Won Sohn of California State University who believes that just such an event happened during the Great Depression. “As the U.S. economy was recovering in 1936 and 1937, it slid back into a recession as interest rates rose,” according to Nin-Hai Tseng writing for CNN. Mark Vitner, senior economist for Wells Fargo Securities, considers himself an optimist, but has just doubled his expectations for such an event in the near future. And Investors Business Daily just reminded its readers that the biggest tax increase in history will happen automatically on January 1, 2011, when the Bush tax cuts put in place in 2003 will be allowed to expire. President Obama’s national debt commission also painted a gloomy picture when co-chairs Alan Simpson and Erskine Bowles told the National Governors Association that “everything needs to be considered — including curtailing popular tax breaks, such as the home mortgage deduction, and instituting a financial trigger mechanism for gaining Medicare coverage.” Bowles said that the nation’s debt “is like a cancer. It is truly going to destroy the country from within.” Simpson expanded Bowles’ remarks: “The rest of the federal government, including fighting two wars, homeland security, education, art, culture, you name it, veterans, the whole rest of the discretionary budget, is being financed by China and other countries… Just think about that: all that money, going somewhere else, to create jobs and opportunity somewhere else.” Simpson added that the members of the commission are “good people of deep, deep difference[s], knowing the possibility of the odds of success are rather harrowing to say the least.” Modifying police and fire department expenses, reducing health services, cutting transportation budgets, and shrinking school budgets will all be painful, no doubt. But just wait until pensioners start seeing their benefits being cut, and bond holders see their interest earnings cut or eliminated altogether. At that point the pain of politicians’ promises not being kept will really, and inevitably, be felt. No one will be immune. It’s just a matter of time before reality kicks in. Trackback(0)
Comments (3)
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rprew
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Regarding fire departments... There was a day when fire companies were funded by insurance companies. When someone purchased fire insurance from a participating insurance company, they were issued an emblem to affix to their structure. When a fire company was dispatched to a fire, they checked for the presence of an emblem. If there was an emblem, they fought the fire. If not, they stood by to be sure the fire did not spread to any nearby insured structures (although they did respond to saving lives). Purchasing fire insurance (and the protection it provided) was purely voluntary. And no tax dollars were required. The only ones who paid for fire protection were the people who both needed and wanted it. |
Wooblues
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... How can you fix,that which is unfixable?Looting of people here in america has gone on for a long time.CAFR shows that there are a second set of books for every city,county,state etc. because we are a corporation everything,everyone has been put under the corporation.No more states,just economic zones so as human capital how will you serve the Corporate State? |
Red Pill Please
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The Red Flags Were Raised Long Ago! Ron Paul, for nearly two decades has been warning us about our impending financial doom and for the most part, his message has repeatedly fallen upon deaf ears, particularly in the media and District of Criminals. We now face a bitter pill to swallow and we can only blame ourselves. We put those Keynesian worshippers in office that have only produced a growing leviathan of egregious government expansion, corruption and greed where we will soon pay the price for our own neglect and voter incompetence. Bureaucrats are loathe to face these unpleasant, but obvious realities. It is much more appealing to wave their magic wand of regulation and public spending and divert blame elsewhere. It is time to be honest about our problems.Dr. Paul never votes for legislation unless the proposed measure is expressly authorized by the Constitution and this wisdom continually goes unheeded at our own peril. |





Pew Research recently polled Americans about ways to bring state budgets into balance and found that respondents did not like any of the options. In its Congressional Connection 

